The opera is way too dark. It runs far too long. It’s requires a soprano with vocal cords of amalgamated steel to sing the title role. No wonder Cherubini’s Medea is rarely performed. According to OPERA America records, the opera hasn’t been performed in the United States in nearly 20 years.
That’s why if you are remotely close to the Glimmerglass Festival in Central New York this summer, you need to drop everything and buy yourself a ticket—right now. If you’re across the pond and have a private jet, start fueling it.
Medea tells a portion of the classic tale of one of the great sorceresses of the ancient world of the same name, who falls in love with Jason. She uses her magic to help him obtain the Golden Fleece. She even kills her own brother to ensure that Jason and she escape Colchis with the fleece. Cherubini’s opera begins after Jason and Medea are married, after she bears him two children, but their past history together is important to understanding why Medea becomes desperate for revenge against Jason. As the opera opens, Jason has forsaken Medea to marry Glauce, the daughter of Creon. She poisons Glauce on her wedding night. But Glauce’s death does not slake her hunger for revenge, so she murders her own children. Jason is crushed by his sorrow. Médée returns to the temple and sets it on fire, and she escapes before both the temple and the palace go up in flames.
Everything about this production was simply magnificent. From the sets to the costumes to the stage effects to the orchestra to the singers to Medea. Especially Medea. In both her role and company debut, Alexandra Deshorties as Medea is spectacular—a tour de force. Her voice has power, range, and color as does her acting ability. To pull off a character of mythic proportions like Medea, who is emotionally ravaged to the extent Medea is, you need a consummate actress and singer. Deshorties imbues abundant texture into her interpretation of this demanding part. At times, she infuses a raw, reedy quality at the top of her range that immediately put me in mind of Callas for whom Medea was a signature role. Deshorties also has power in her mid- to upper-range and when combined with the wonderful acoustics of the house, she literally takes your breath away. Her complete, focused performance draws you into Medea’s world with such skill, that when Medea finally makes up her mind to kill her own children, you (almost) understand why.
However, it’s not enough to have a top-shelf Medea to have a first-rate show. This is Cherubini, after all. This is a complex, layered, three-act opera that requires perfect performance technique. It demands capable supporting players around Medea and a director and designers with a fresh vision for a show to lift up the music while making an ancient tale one capable of moving modern audiences.